U.S. company results in industrial, materials sectors could shed light
on inflation woes
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[October 21, 2021] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Corporate results in
the industrial and materials sectors could offer a snapshot of how
companies in a key swath of the U.S. economy are dealing with surging
inflation, supply chain bottlenecks and higher commodity prices.
Companies in those sectors -- which include logistics and transportation
firms, major chemical makers and manufacturers and suppliers for the
aerospace, automotive and construction industries -- are expected to
post strong third-quarter results.
Their position in the global economy, however, gives many companies in
the industrial and materials sectors a window into the fallout from
rising input costs, supply chain snags and other issues that have
bedeviled the United States and other countries as economic reopenings
spur a surge in demand.
Signs that companies are continuing to raise costs or expect inflation
and logistics snafus to persist could bolster the view that the recent
surge in consumer prices will prove more sustainable than expected,
despite assurances from the Federal Reserve that the recent rise is
likely transitory.
Supply chain and inflation issues have rippled through companies in a
broad range of sectors, from tech companies to consumer product firms.
Many industrial and materials companies have already relayed the
challenges they face. Diversified manufacturer 3M at an investor
conference last month pointed to inflation coming in higher than
expected, with cost pressures in resins, wood pulp and labor. Eaton Corp
last month warned its third-quarter revenue would come in "slightly
below" the low end of its forecast largely due to the "inability to
serve the demand that we're getting."
Also last month, paint and coatings company Sherwin-Williams lowered its
2021 sales and earnings estimates citing "escalating raw material
availability challenges and inflation headwinds."
"Everyone is going to feel the pain at different rates," said Joshua
Aguilar, U.S. multi-industry analyst at Morningstar. "Your short-cycle
businesses are going to feel it first, but no one is immune. What you
want is ideally somebody who has the pricing lever to offset that."
Investors will learn more in the coming days as corporate reports
arrive, including Dow Inc on Thursday, and 3M, General Electric, and
Caterpillar next week.
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A specialist trader works inside a booth on the floor of the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 6, 2021.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Industrial and materials were among the economically sensitive cyclical
stocks that had broadly benefited after breakthrough vaccine data last
November created optimism about the economy's ability to emerge from the
coronavirus pandemic.
Yet while energy and financials have continued to shine among such
economically sensitive groups, industrial and material shares have been
weighed down by worries over how fallout from higher prices and supply
chain issues will affect their bottom lines, investors said.
While the overall S&P 500 has gained 14% since the first quarter ended,
the S&P 500 industrials sector has increased about 6%, and the materials
sector has climbed roughly 8%.
"We know this quarter was hit by these margin issues, but are we going
to see this continue for the next two quarters, or is it a one-quarter
event?" said Walter Todd, chief investment officer with Greenwood
Capital in South Carolina. "That’s the real unknown at this point, and
that will drive ... how these stocks react."
Industrials make up 8% of the overall S&P 500 index while materials
account for 2.5%.
Some investors are betting companies in the sectors can see more upside,
especially if they can weather rising costs including with strong
pricing power for their products.
Ryan Cope, portfolio manager at American Century Investments, holds
shares of bearings maker Timken Co in the small-cap value portfolio he
manages.
"Companies that have pricing power in their business models will really
start to show much better results than companies that do not," Cope
said.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Diane
Craft)
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